Top posts this week on Progressive Geographies

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Forgiving Foucault and Defining Neoliberalism

Another contribution to the discussion concerning Foucault and neoliberalism.

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“Economics is therefore not the analysis of processes; it is the analysis of an activity. So it is no longer the analysis of the historical logic of processes; it is the analysis of internal rationality, the strategic programming of individuals’ activity” (Foucault, M. The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978-1979)

Late in 2014 an interview was conducted at Jacobin entitled “Can We Criticize Foucault?”, wherein sociologist Daniel Zamora posits that the late French philosopher – and subsequently rather a sacred cow in plenty of leftist circles – had in the last years of his life reconciled his own perspectives, to a previously unacknowledged degree, with the project of neoliberalism. The interview itself was related to the impending English translation of Critiquer Foucault: Les années 1980 et la tentation néolibérale, a collection of essays on the topic. Considering that the interview was necessarily a…

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Lively Infrastructures -Ash Amin

Lecture at Harvard GSD by Ash Amin on ‘Lively Infrastructures’.

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Marijn Nieuwenhuis: Spatial Sensitivity, Terrestrial Fixity and China’s Territory

A bit late linking to this, but there is an interesting interview with my Warwick colleague Marijn Nieuwenhuis in the ‘Geopolitical Passport’ series at Exploring Geopolitics.

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Catherine Malabou 2015 Wellek Lectures – “Metamorphoses of Intelligence”

Catherine Malabou will give the 2015 Wellek Lectures on May 20-22. The topic is “Metamorphoses of Intelligence”.

The Critical Theory Institute at UC Irvine presents the Wellek Library Lectures, featuring Catherine Malbou.
Malabou will be giving three lectures on “Metamorphoses of Intelligence.”

Established in 1981, the Wellek lectures have enabled distinguished critics to exchange ideas and defend their work over the course of three lectures. The featured scholars have shaped the direction of contemporary critical theory. Past lead lecturers have included Jean Baudrillard, Étienne Balibar, Edward Said, Jean-François Lyotard, and Jacques Derrida. This event is named in honor of Professor René Wellek, whose corpus of work in critical theory is housed at UC Irvine’s Langson Library. The papers resulting from the Wellek lectures will be published by Columbia University Press.

This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please contact Michelle Maasz at mmaasz@uci.edu.

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Henri Lefebvre, Metaphilosophy – forthcoming in 2016 from Verso with introduction by Stuart Elden

metaphilosophieHenri Lefebvre’s fundamental book Métaphilosophie is forthcoming in translation in Spring 2016 from Verso. It will have an introduction from me. Further details when available.

I’ve long wanted this book to be translated – hopefully as the first of a few of his more philosophical-conceptual studies. They are so important to his overall work, and yet have largely been absent from Anglophone debates.

A short piece from this book was translated for the Key Writings collection, but no other parts are currently in English. Many thanks to Sebastian Budgen at Verso for his support of this project.

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Jacques Derrida, Les arts de l’espace: Ecrits et interventions sur l’architecture

téléchargementJacques Derrida, Les arts de l’espace: Ecrits et interventions sur l’architecture

Après Penser à ne pas voir qui réunissait les principaux textes de Jacques Derrida sur le dessin, la peinture et la photographie, voici l’ensemble de s’es réflexions sur l’architecture. Ginette Michaud et Joana Maso ont regroupé chronologiquement entretiens, lettres, communications, interventions dans les forums et les tables rondes qui concernent l’architecture, les rapports du texte à l’architecture et les débats nombreux avec les architectes – essentiellement Bernard Tschumi, Peter Eisenman et Daniel Libeskind. «La déconstruction est peut-être une manière de remettre en question le modèle architectural lui-même, déclare Derrida, – ce modèle architectural qui est une question d’ordre général, même au coeur de la philosophie, la métaphore des fondations, des superstructures, ce que Kant appelle «l’architectonique». etc, ainsi, également, que le concept de l’arkhê… Aussi la déconstruction implique-t-elle de remettre en question l’architecture dans la philosophie, et peut-être l’architecture elle-même.»

 

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The Funambulist Papers Volume 2 – print on demand and open access e-book

The Funambulist Papers Volume 2, edited by Léopold Lambert is now available as print on demand and open access e-book from Punctum Books. I have an essay in it, along with Derek Gregory, Gastón Gordillo, Grégoire Chamayou, Erin Manning, Elena Loizidou and many others. The book is available as an open access pdf, or print-on-demand. If you do download it, and find it useful, please consider donating – it might be open access, but it’s not free to produce.

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This book is the second volume of texts curated specifically for The Funambulist since 2011. The editorial line of this second series of twenty-six essays is dedicated to philosophical and political questions about bodies. This choice is informed by Léopold Lambert’s own interest in the (often violent) relation between the designed environment and bodies. Corporeal politics do not exist in a void of objects, buildings and cities; on the contrary, they operate through the continuous material encounters between living and non-living bodies. Several texts proposed in this volume examine various forms of corporeal violence (racism, gender-based violence, etc.). This examination, however, can only exist in the integration of the designed environment’s conditioning of this violence. As Mimi Thi Nguyen argues in the conclusion of this book’s first chapter, “the process of attending to the body — unhooded, unveiled, unclothed — cannot be the solution to racism, because that body is always already an abstraction, an effect of law and its violence.” Although the readers won’t find indications about the disciplinary background of the contributors — the “witty” self-descriptions at the end of the book being preferred to academic resumés — the content of the texts will certainly attest to the broad imaginaries at work throughout this volume. Dialogues between dancers and geographers, between artists and biohackers, between architects and philosophers, and so forth, provide the richness of this volume through difference rather than similarity.

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Making Writing Visible – strategies and poster

Making Writing Visible – strategies and poster at Jo van Every’s site.

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Would you put a sign on your door?

What feelings does that bring up?

Are your gremlins worried about what would happen? What are their concerns?

Would it be different if lots of people had a sign on their door when they were writing? If it were normal?

If you want to try it, here’s a sign:

Meeting In Progress sign (US standard letter size)

Meeting in Progress sign (A4)

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Lauren Berlant Society and Space lecture at the AAG

Final details of the Society and Space lecture at the AAG meeting in Chicago.

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